sometimes I twitch too .....I will just have to man up and admit it ....![]()
We are on the same page Gillchaser !
In the last three days I caught 190 fish via twitch'n & pause. I finally tried a small lure under a float and caught a few gills and a small bass!
Too slow for me so back to twitch'n so as to cover as much water as possible. The last day (yesterday) with 90 fish caught, I could have done well with the float considering the dense schools located in different pad areas. I anchored for 20 minutes at a time and blasted fish close to pad edges!
A bit of background any angler would drool over:
The bite was slow starting out near one shoreline so I moved to the northwest where giant leaf lily pads had produced in the last two days. I started to see schools of fish near the surface in different areas out from the pad edges that I presumed were baitfish. But then, further away, the schools were being attacked on the surface creating big splashes! Note: the day was perfect: partly cloudy sky, water like glass and a low sun angle at 5pm. But as important was the fact the giant leaf pads have stems that grow 8 ft. (Note the transducer on a t.m. is about 1 ft. further from the surface.) which is where all the fish were located !
All lures I cast caught fish - all were rigged on 1/24 or 1/16 oz jigs. Fish hit close to the surface on splashdown or mid-depth at 4' almost vertical twitching. Many fish attacked a lure 5x on the same retrieve before hooking themselves! Here are a few:
Attachment 494000 As the sun was going down, splashes happened all over the place - BIG SPLASHES ! - making me think bass were getting into the fun. I didn't have my bass rod or large surface lures or I might have moved to those areas.
I will venture out this afternoon late to see if this crazy scenario is repeated. But as usual - right place/right time always prevails and likely not to be repeated. (But hey, I can hope it is...)
Last edited by Spoonminnow; 09-19-2024 at 06:29 AM.
sometimes I twitch too .....I will just have to man up and admit it ....![]()
sum kawl me tha outlaw ketchn whales![]()
S10CHEVY haha
Okay, I am going to be the dumb one and ask, what is twitch fishing and how do you do it? Any video links?
You cast your jig out , let it sink to desired depth, start a very slow retrieve while twitching the rod tip ..
gives your jig an erratic movement through the water .
Seems to Drives fish crazy !
Check out some of Troutmagnetman’s YouTube videos.
In some you can see his retrieve and how he works the rod .
He uses trout magnets of course .
I mainly use handtied micro hair jigs .
“ The bigger the Bend , the Wider the Grin ! “peshtigost LIKED above post
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Gillchaser, you said it all with that statement.Always looking for that perfect bait and combo that works the best , most of the time
I guess that's why I tinker making hybrid (Frankenstein) soft plastics - always trying to find more 'toys' to play with. The majority of those shapes/actions affect the fish's senses which include motion detection (especially very subtle finesse actions) and sight (which confirms the shape and actions of the moving body and tail (if any).
Twitching is a presentation unlike that used for most bass lures. Bass lures such as heavy skirted jigs with trailers, spinnerbaits with large blades (with and without trailers), 3" crankbaits with larger diving bills, 4" surface lures and Texas rigged 8" plastic worms with 1/8 - 1/2 oz. bullet weights, all have actions and visuals that are far more extreme, that move faster and steadily.
My twitch-retrieve is this:
I use a combination of slight rod tip twitches - raising the tip no more than 1" and lowering each time along with slight turns of the reel handle - not only to take in line slack but to impart more slight movements in between rod tip twitches. Even lures with no tails have an action fish can't ignore and that drives them nuts! such as two grub bodies melted together - totally unique and sold nowhere:
Just one example of what Gillchaser stated about finding perfect lures for most situations. Only twitching makes this lure work to the max along with 40 or so other designs I've discovered - modified or right from the mold. Even molded lures have parts I can use to add to others, and man, I got a lotta molds!
There are other lures that benefit from twitching: the 2.5" Floating Rapala a good example. When twitched, the balsa lure dives slightly as it wobbles forward 2", creating surface rings. I pause it between each slight rod-tip twitch/slight reel handle turn (some say it copies the action of a dying minnow). Of course the Rapala can be retrieved by cranking steadily past targets in open water, but fish gotta be in a chasing mood for them to attack.
Twitch'n focuses on suspended fish that are semi-active, waiting for that opportunity to show a moving object who's boss and then relaxing with fellow slouches. Unlike large bass lures that are more dramatic, finesse lures and retrieves are super-subtle exuding a. 'please, please don't hurt me as I wiggle & twitch in place!'
Last edited by Spoonminnow; 10-16-2024 at 03:00 AM.
BTW, twitch lures and retrieve catch mighty big fish!
examples:
bass, channel and mud catfish, white sucker, carp and pickerel
This disproves targeting only certain species and weight classes of fish by using specific lures. Granted, larger lures generally exclude catching smaller fish species, but small lures are fish-species universal and a big challenge when big fish hit - especially fished hooked on 1/16 oz. jigs with #4 hook.
Large crappie, white and yellow perch and sunfish have been caught using 4" Kut Tail worms on a light jig:
I'd bet with the much larger (heavier) panfish down south, twitching large soft plastics should catch some monsters!
Thanks a lot guys. Sounds like using my trout magnet twitch on something larger. I will give it a try! I have a couple of great baits in mind!
What I really like about this group is how we think. Like you guys I have never been content using the same thing everyone else uses. Experimenting and finding something better that not everybody is using is half the fun. Catching fish is the other half of the fun!